THE CONFLICT DEEPENING—MR. ROBERTS AGAIN ON TRIAL
The determination to crush out “Nazaritism,” which was
but another name for “the holiness movement,” had now become the fixed and
settled policy of the Regency power in the Genesee Conference; and the purpose
to be true to God and to the work of “spreading Scriptural holiness over the
land,” for which Methodism originally claimed to have been raised up, was
equally settled on the part of the persecuted preachers and their friends. Each
party was fully committed to the conflict, which was constantly deepening, and
had ventured too far into it to entertain any idea of retreating or surrendering
now. The conspirators for the crushing of “Nazaritism” were sharpening their
tools and laying their plans for doing desperate execution at the next session
of the Conference. We shall see presently how they proceeded.
In his “Cyclopedia of Methodism,” Article on “The
Free Methodists,” Bishop Simpson says: “In 1858, two of the leaders were
expelled from the Conference.” This is partly incorrect. Two preachers were
expelled at that time, but one of them, Joseph McCreery, though prominently
identified with the holiness movement and the work of revival and reform in the
Conference, not only was never a leader in the Free Methodist Church, but was
opposed to its organization in 1860, and did not connect himself with it until
five years after it was organized.
With regard to the penalties the Bishop’s statement
is also equally misleading. The statement would lead one who did not know
otherwise to suppose expulsion from the Conference was the full extent of
the penalty inflicted in these cases. Such, however, is not the case. They were
both “expelled from the Conference, and from the Church.” Why the whole
truth is not stated must be largely a matter of conjecture. It has been
suggested that possibly the Bishop was “unwilling to have it appear that the
laws of the M. E. Church, as then administered, were like the laws of
Draco, and punished the slightest offense, or even no offense, with death; or,
worse still, like the edicts of Nero, which tortured men for being Christians.”
Of course, one would naturally suppose that the
offenses committed by these preachers must have been of an exceedingly
aggravated character, to merit the infliction of the highest penalty known to
ecclesiastical law. Whether or not such was the case will fully appear as we
consider the trial proceedings.
The reader will remember what was said in the
preceding chapter regarding the report sent out, after Mr. Roberts’s first
trial, that he had been convicted by his Conference of “immoral conduct.” That
report was evidently shaped and circulated with a view to producing the
impression that he had been guilty of gross iniquity. And what a shame! It is
not to be wondered at that many among his close personal friends were deeply
wounded at this indignity, added to what he had already borne. Nor is it at all
strange that such treatment of a God-fearing minister of Jesus Christ should
have been strongly resented and reprobated by some. The attempt on the part of
one of his friends to free his own soul regarding what he considered a most
unrighteous verdict in the case was finally seized upon and charged to Mr.
Roberts himself, by the Regency, as the basis of the second bill of charges, on
which he was tried, and expelled from the Conference and from the Church.
That friend was a layman, named George W. Estes, who
resided on the Clarkson circuit. He was a man of intelligence, as the sequel to
the story will show. He was also a man of influence in his community. He was
decidedly alive in religious experience, and had labored effectively with Mr.
Roberts in the revival meetings he conducted in Brockport while pastor there.
Entirely on his own initiative, and with Mr. Roberts
wholly uninformed as to what he purposed to do, Mr. Estes during the year
republished the article on “New School Methodism,” together with a short account
of the trial, in pamphlet form, defraying all the expenses from his own purse.
The following is the complete text of the Estes article, except the bill of
charges, which we have already given in the preceding chapter:
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN
The foregoing [1]
article in the Northern Independent was made the subject of general
consultations in private caucuses of the Buffalo Regency, held in a room over
Bryant & Clark’s book store, at LeRoy, on Thursday, Friday and Saturday
evenings of the first week of the Conference, the result of which was the Bill
of Charges given below. The manner of committing the feebler of the preachers
to the condemnation of Brother Roberts in advance, was on this wise, as
related by one present. One of the chiefs of the Regency, acting as chairman,
asked: “What shall be done in the case of Brother Roberts? All in favor of his
prosecution raise your hands?” The “immortal thirty” raised their hands, and a
few presiding elderlings. The chairman then delivered a flaming exhortation to
unanimity—that they must be united enough to carry the matter through,
or it would not do to undertake it. After sundry exhortations, the vote was
taken again, and a few more voted. After another season of fervent
exhortation, a third vote was taken, in which all, save one, concurred; and
the trial and condemnation were determined upon. Beautiful work this for
godly, Methodist preachers, deriving their support from honest, religious
societies among us! We put their Bill of Charges, with all its ingenious
distortion of facts, on record here before the people as follows: (See pages
148, 151).
For several years past there has been the annual
sacrifice of a human victim at the Conference. It has been a custom. The
religious rites and ceremonies attending this annual lustration assume a legal
complexion. The victim is immolated according to law. E. Thomas, ‘J. McCreery,
I. C. Kingsley, L. Stiles and B. T. Roberts constitute the “noble band of
martyrs” thus far. Who Is selected for the next annual victim is not yet
known. The midnight conclave of the “immortal thirty” has not yet made its
selection. No man is safe who dares even whisper a word against this secret
Inquisition in our midst. Common crime can command its
Indulgences—bankruptcies and adulteries are venal offenses—but opposition to
its schemes and policies is a “mortal sin”—a crime “without benefit of
clergy.” The same fifty men who voted Brother Roberts guilty of “unchristian
and immoral conduct” for writing the above [named] article, voted to readmit a
brother from the regions round about Buffalo, for the service performed of
kissing a young lady in the vestibule of the Conference room during the
progress of Brother Roberts’s trial. “Nero fiddled while the martyrs burned.”
Brother Roberts’s trial—if it deserves the name of
trial—was marked by gross iniquity of proceedings. There are no regular Church
canons in the M. E. Church to govern the specific manner of conducting trials.
All is indefinite; A glorious incertitude and independence of all legal
regulations prevail. The presidential discretion must of necessity have large
latitude and range, either high or low, as prejudice or policy may incline.
Thus, when a witness was asked if he knew of a private meeting of about thirty
preachers at Medina during Conference, he answered, “Yes.” When asked for what
purpose they met, he answered for “consultation.” Here the prosecution
perceiving that all this secret caucusing at the Medina Conference to lock out
the prayer-meetings, arrange the appointments, oust Presiding Elders, etc.,
etc., were likely to be brought out, objected to all the questions In the case
which were not exactly covered by the verbal terms of the specifications which
they themselves had artfully framed. And their objections were
sustained by the Bishop. Every question as to the meetings of the “immortal
thirty”—their doings and teachings —was objected to and ruled out as
irrelevant to the specifications.
Having been charged with affirming the existence
of an associate body of about thirty preachers in the Conference for purposes
indicated in his article, he was denied [the right] to elicit the facts in
justification, which he could have proved by thirty witnesses. This right,
which any civil or military Court would have allowed him, was denied. Of
course, where witnesses refuse to testify, and the judge refuses to compel
them to do so, there was no use wasting time in defense. Brother Roberts
refused to continue the defense.
Also a commission to take testimony was sent to
Buffalo. But when they arrived they found an emissary from the Conference had
been sent on before them to take charge of the Advocate office, who
refused to sell or lend, or suffer to be transcribed, any of the copy of the
papers or articles bearing on the case, and who put everybody “on the square”
to refuse testimony. Having no power to compel witnesses to testify, the
Committee returned with such testimony only as honest men voluntarily offered,
which will be hereafter published.
A venerable Doctor of Divinity read the “auto
da fe” sermon, (prepared for the victim of the previous year) wherein he
consigned, in true inquisitorial style, Brother Roberts, body and soul, to
hell. This was done in his most masterly manner, evincing no embarrassing
amount of idiosyncrasy or other mental cause for superannuation. This
venerable D. D., though nominally superannuated, and an annual claimant of
high rate upon the Conference funds, is nevertheless quite efficient in
embarrassing effective preachers in their work, by concocting “bills of
information” and “bills, of charges ;“ and pleading them to hell for the crime
of preaching and writing the truth. Whether his plea will enhance the amount
of the superannuated collections for the coming year remains to be seen.
It was moved that the vote in Brother Roberts’s
case should be taken by yeas and nays; but the same spirit of concealment and
dread of light, fostered by secret society associations, prevailed here also.
Like some in the olden time, they “feared the people,” and voted down the
motion. The vote to sustain the charge of “unchristian and immoral conduct,”
for writing and publishing these strictures on New School Methodism, was
fifty-two to forty-three, being a majority of nine. Several members
of Conference were absent, and several dodged through fear of the
Presiding-Elder influence upon their appointments.
The following preachers, as near as can be
ascertained, voted to sustain the charge: I. Chamberlayne, G. Lanning, E. C.
Sanborn, H. May, D. Nichols, M. Seager, H. C. Foote, G. Fillmore, A. D. Wilbor,
P. Woodworth, H. L. Waite, H. Butlin, S. M. Hopkins, E. E. Chambers, G. W.
Terry, J. Latham, H. W. Annis, Z. Hurd, T. Carlton, J. M. Fuller, W. H. Depuy,
D. F. Parsons, S. Hunt, J. B. Lanckton, J. McEwen, H. H. Smith, S. C. Smith,
G. Smith, L. Packard, C. S. Baker, W. S. Tuttle, J. McClelland, J. G. Miller,
J. N. Simpkin, S. Y. Hammond, A. P. Ripley, H. M. Ripley, M. W. Ripley, B. L.
Newman, A. Plumley, B. F. McNeal, H. S. Moran, B. M. Buck, J. J. Roberts, S.
Parker, F. W. Conable, J. B. Wentworth, S. H. Baker, J. Timmerman, K. D.
Nettleton, G. Delamater, W. C. Willing.
Another significant fact was apparent in the case:
the power of the Presiding Eldership. Quite a number of preachers would not
vote at all. Too honest to aid the conspiracy, and too cowardly to face the
“loaves-and-fishes” argument presented by the Presiding Elder influence, they
sat still and saw the condemnation of the innocent, when they might have
prevented it.
The influence of the Book Concern had its effect
upon the case. It has become a maxim in politics “that the debtor votes the
creditor’s ticket.” So some indebted to the Concern discreetly refrained from
voting at all; while two preachers, having refused to attend the private
caucuses of the conspirators, and to pledge themselves in advance to vote for
the condemnation of Brother Roberts, were scandalized with a public report of
delinquency, in open Conference, by the Book Agent.
But it was the influence of the slavery question
which was paramount in the case. The Episcopacy is understood to be
conservative on that subject, and “to refer to it judiciously in all the chief
appointments.” Hence the Buffalo Regency in these days (notwithstanding high
professions lately to the contrary, on the eve of election of delegates to the
late General Conference) is also eminently conservative on that subject; and
must needs commend itself to the central Episcopal sympathy by great zeal
against the Northern Independent. Its associate editor in this
Conference must be black-washed in revenge for the temerity of the
people in subscribing for the paper. They could not wreak their vengeance on
the people, except by proscribing one acknowledged, above all others in the
Conference, to be the PEOPLE’S MAN.
The infamous Brockport Resolutions [2]
against the Nazarites, were tacitly indorsed by the Conference in its refusal
to entertain the question of official administration involved in their
passage. This is their reward for their spaniel loyalty to the Northern
Advocate, and every other thing that wears the label of “law and order,”
affixed by a pro-slavery administration. It is stated that two or three
Nazarites voted with the Regency against the publication of the slavery report
in the Independent. Surely it must be true of them, as reported, that
they court persecutions and rejoice in being killed off at every Conference.
Their strong hold upon the popular mind can not long survive their further
blinking the slavery Issue. We shall see.
So, brethren in the membership of the Genesee
Conference, you see we have a clique among us called the Buffalo
Regency—conspiring and acting in secret conclave to kidnap or drive away, or
proscribe and destroy, by sham trials, and starvation appointments, every one
who has boldness to question their supremacy in the Conference. By threats of
insubordination, and farcical outcries of strife and division, they frighten
the Episcopacy to give them the Presiding-Eldership power, with its patronage
of appointments, and having that, of course they command the Conference vote,
so far as they dare for fear of the people. We are fast losing our best men.
The fearless champions of true Methodism are being cloven down, one after
another, in our sight; and we sit loyally still, and weep and pray, and pay
our money, yet another and another year, hoping the thing will come to an end.
A thousand of us asked the Bishop to rid us of
this incubus, which is crushing us into the earth.
“We will do the best we can,” was the stereotyped
reply to our loyal entreaties. How many more victims must be immolated, how
many societies must be desolated, while the Episcopacy is making up its mind
to grapple with this monster power, which is writhing its slimy folds around
the Church of God, and crushing out its life? The Episcopacy, which alone has
the power, having failed to redress our grievances and rid us of this
unmethodistic and foreign dynasty, there is no remedy but an appeal to
personal rights. The remedy of every member is within his own reach. For one,
I shall apply that remedy. For me, while looking on. those preachers standing
to be counted (no wonder they objected to the yeas and nays) in the vote to
condemn Brother Roberts, at LeRoy, I made up my mind that not one of
them—preacher, Presiding Elder or superannuate—should ever receive a cent of
my money, on any pretense or by any combination whatsoever. I shall punctually
attend Church at my own meeting house—prayer-meetings, class-meetings,
love-feasts, and all the means of grace; but if one of those men come there to
preach—I can’t help that—that is not my business. But I shall neither rim a
step, nor pay a cent. And if, as has been told, all the domestic missionary
appropriations in this Conference are varied from year to year—made and
withheld to suit the pockets of Regency men appointed to them—this, as long as
It continues, will absolve me from obligations to that cause. The same of the
superannuate fund, so long as it is controlled by that dynasty. I agreed to
support the M. E. Church as a Church of the living God; not as the mere
adjunct of a secular or political clique.
GEORGE W. ESTES.
With regard to the foregoing Mr. Roberts says:
I never saw this article until some time after it
was published, and was in no wise responsible for its publication. But Mr.
Estes —a man of means, an exhorter in the M. B. Church, was responsible, and
like a man, he assumed the responsibility. At the last Quarterly Conference In
the year, the question of the renewal of his license came up. The Presiding
Elder asked George W. Estes if he was the author of that pamphlet? He replied
that he was Without a word of objection, the Presiding Elder renewed his
license as an Exhorter, and soon after went to Conference, and voted to
expel me from the Conference and the Church, on the charge of publishing
this very pamphlet.[3]
This is clearly another instance of sacrificing
consistency and fairness on the altar of expediency. The Presiding Elder in
question was a tool of the Regency faction, one of those men so wanting in the
element of moral stamina that when Simon said, “Thumbs down,” he was servilely
obedient, without any consideration of the inconsistency or unrighteousness of
his action. In secret caucus the Regency power had predetermined that Mr.
Roberts’s ecclesiastical head must go; and, when the test came, the Presiding
Elder, though fully informed that George W. Estes, and not B. T. Roberts, was
the author of the pamphlet, gave his vote to expel Mr. Roberts from the
Conference and the Church on the ground of having republished and circulated
“New School Methodism,” or having assisted in doing so.
The following is the second bill of charges
preferred against Mr. Roberts:
CHARGES.—I hereby charge Benjamin T. Roberts with unchristian and immoral
conduct.
SPECIFICATIONS
First, Contumacy: In disregarding the admonition
of this Conference, in its decision upon his case at its last session.
Second, In republishing, or assisting in the
republishing and circulating of a document, entitled “New School Methodism,”
the original publication of which had been pronounced by this Conference
“unchristian and immoral conduct.”
Third, In publishing, or assisting in the
publication and circulation of a document, printed in Brockport, and signed,
“George W. Estes,” and appended to the one entitled “New School Methodism,”
and containing among other libels upon this Conference generally, and upon
some of its members particularly, the following, to wit:
1. “For several years past there has been the annual sacrifice of a human
victim at the Conference.”
2. “No man is safe who dare even whisper a word against this secret
inquisition in our midst.”
3. “Common crime can command its indulgences; bankruptcies and adulteries
are venal offenses; but opposition to its schemes and policies is a mortal
sin—a crime without benefit of clergy.”
4. That “the same fifty men who voted Brother Roberts guilty of unchristian
and immoral conduct voted to readmit a brother for the service performed of
kissing a young lady.”
5. That “Brother Roberts’s trial was marked by gross iniquity of
proceedings.”
6. That “on the trial, a right which any civil or military Court would have
allowed him, was denied.”
7. That “a venerable Doctor of Divinity read the ‘auto da fé’ sermon,
wherein he consigned in true inquisitorial style Brother Roberts’s body and
soul to hell.!’
8. That “this venerable ‘D. D.’ is quite efficient in embarrassing
effective preachers in their work and pleading them to hell for the crime of
preaching and writing the truth.”
9. That “there is a clique among us called the Buffalo Regency, conspiring
and acting in secret conclave, to kidnap, or drive away, or proscribe and
destroy, by sham trials and starvation appointments, every one who has the
boldness to question their supremacy in the Conference.”
10. That “the fearless champions of Methodism are being cloven down one
after another In our sight.”
11. That “the aforesaid members of this Conference are a ‘monster power,’
which is writhing its slimy folds around the Church of God and crushing out
its life.”
Signed, DAVID NICHOLS.
PERRY, October 11, 1858.
The Rev. Thomas Canton and the Rev. James M. Fuller
acted as counsel for the prosecution.
Mr. Roberts was not altogether without premonition
of the coming storm. He had been credibly informed of threats made against him.
The following is given as an instance:
The Rev. S. C. Church, an old Presiding Elder, and a
Freemason as well, but one of those noble-minded members of the fraternity who
are better than the principles of their order, and who was indignant that
Masonry should be scandalized by being pressed into service by ministers of
Jesus Christ for the control of Conference affairs, gave him intimation of what
he might have to reckon with in the following communication:
During the last session of our Conference, at
LeRoy, I was conversing with Rev. R. Ryan Smith, about the remark made by Rev.
B. T. Roberts on the floor of the Conference, to the effect that the Committee
on Education was packed.
Smith said, “One more such statement will blot
Roberts out”
In the same conversation, he said, “You had better
take yourself out of the way, or you will be crushed.”
CARYVILLE, October 20, 1857.
SAMUEL C. CHURCH.
Anticipating the arrest of his character, Mr. Roberts
had engaged the Rev. B. I. Ives, of the Oneida Conference, to act as counsel in
his defense, and Mr. Ives was present for that purpose. But the Bishop ruled
that counsel from another Conference was not allowable, and firmly adhered to
that ruling.
Then, as a majority of the Conference claimed to
have been slandered, in their individual character, by what Mr. Roberts had
written, and also as he was now informed that they had already virtually voted,
in their secret caucus, to condemn him, he called for a change of venue, quoting
the wise provision of the civil law, as follows:
“The venue may be changed to another County when the
defendant conceives that he can not have a fair and impartial trial in the
County where the venue is laid.”
He also pleaded that “not one man of the majority
would be permitted, under similar circumstances, to sit on a jury in a Civil
Court, if twenty-five cents only were at issue.” He also quoted the following as
authority for the granting of his request:
“If the law says a man shall be judge in his own cause, such being contrary
to natural equity, shall be void, for jura naturae sunt immutabilia; they
are leges legum. Natural rights are immutable. They are the laws of
laws.”— Hobart’s Report, page 87, Day vs. Savage.
It will be plain to every unbiased mind that, in a
case like this, where ministerial reputation was at stake, a thing which the
true minister of Jesus holds as dear as his own life, the defendant should have
been entitled to everything that could defeat injustice and contribute to a fair
trial. But ecclesiastical Inquisitions are usually deaf to all pleadings from
the oppressed and persecuted for anything like fairness and justice. The
request was persistently refused.
Having failed in both the foregoing efforts to
obtain anything like fairness in the trial of his case, Mr. Roberts as a last
resort, urged that he might be tried by a committee, according to the provision
of the Discipline. He expressed his preference for a committee small enough so
that each member would feel a sense of personal responsibility for his action,
even though the committee should be composed of those who were most strongly
committed against him, rather than to have it go before the entire Conference,
where members could hide behind each other. To one who reads the story more than
half a century later, when all the heat of controversy and all the personal
animosities that entered into the case at the time have passed away, the
foregoing appears as an altogether fair and reasonable request. But again his
request was refused!
It has been said by an eminent writer that “Law is
not law if it violates the principles of eternal justice.” And certainly “the
principles of eternal justice” were so involved in this case that, from the
present point of view, it is difficult to see how, with any regard for those
principles, all the foregoing requests could have been denied. We are not
surprised that Mr. Roberts, writing of these decisions nearly twenty years
afterward, should have said:
All this, we know, sounds more like the
proceedings of the English “High Commission” In the days of James the Second,
and Charles the First, than like the doings of a Conference of Christian
ministers, presided over by a godly Bishop, in the nineteenth century.
Macaulay says of those Commissioners, who covered themselves with infamy, and
sent many a godly minister to beggary or to prison: “They were themselves at
once prosecutors and judges.”
But the facts that we here relate have never been
called in question.
These are the conditions and circumstances under which
Mr. Roberts was finally subjected to trial. Any one who carefully considers them
can not fail to see that his enemies had done all they could do, and still have
the semblance of formal ecclesiastical proceedings, to block the wheels of
justice. “Nazaritism” must be stamped out at any cost; Roberts was a leader
among the alleged “Nazarites ;“ therefore it had been predetermined to strike at
the head of the offensive system, and when the blow was about to be given it was
very necessary to preclude the possibility of effective self-defense on the part
of the man chosen for sacrifice. How otherwise can such wanton disregard for
personal rights and for “the principle of eternal justice” be accounted for?
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